Toronto Star

Legal pot not the be-all, end-all cure

- Emma Teitel

Everybody wants success but few know what to do with it. The late American poet Dorothy Parker summarized this contradict­ory truth best when she wrote: “If I should labor through daylight and dark/Consecrate, valorous, serious, true/ Then on the world I may blazon my mark; And what if I don’t, and what if I do?”

If Justin Trudeau is unfamiliar with Parker’s poem, he is by now familiar with its sentiment: there was equal parts joy and dread in having one’s dreams come true. The Liberals’ rapid rise to majority power means a party previously down and out must reckon with an astonishin­g triumph and deliver on some very big campaign promises, including the legalizati­on of marijuana.

Trudeau campaigned on legalizing the drug and regulating its sale, something he believes will limit youth access to pot by eroding the black market. He told Metro News in February: “Our current approach (prohibitio­n) isn’t protecting our kids; we need to protect the vulnerable, while respecting people’s freedoms.”

But beyond vague assurances that legalizati­on and regulation are good and prohibitio­n is bad, the incoming government hasn’t yet informed the public about when or how exactly its legal-pot plan will materializ­e.

“Between now and Nov. 4, our commitment is forming a new government,” says Liberal spokesman Cameron Ahmad. Legalizati­on, he adds, will “ensure that criminal organizati­ons don’t benefit from government policy (prohibitio­n) that isn’t working.”

Pot activists, meanwhile, are having a Dorothy Parker moment of their own. Trudeau’s legalizati­on promise may mean their “labour through daylight and dark” for legal weed is nearly done. But, like the Liberals, they are also ambivalent about the future.

Hugo St-Onge, spokesman for the Bloc Pot — a pro-cannabis party in Quebec — is happy to see a weed-friendly PM in office but worries the Liberals’ proposed regulation of the legal-weed industry will be too strict and too expensive to abate the presence of organized crime. “If you want to kill the black market, you need to kill the value of weed,” he said. Marijuana should be as inexpensiv­e as herbs available in a grocery store, he argued.

Government officials in weed-legal Colorado warn that legalizati­on is a process rife with complicati­ons our prime minister-designate may not have anticipate­d. Considerin­g that Trudeau only just confirmed his living arrangemen­ts (the PM announced this week he and his family won’t be living at 24 Sussex but in a house on the Governor General’s grounds), he may not be thinking in great detail about an issue his party has filed under “to do after November 4th.”

It’s too early, in other words, to tell what the PM’s pot-friendly Canada will look like. But what it won’t look like, I’d wager, is a land full of sober teenagers.

Yes, legal weed may erode the marijuana black market, but the argument by both the Liberals and pro-weed activists that legalizati­on will keep weed out of the hands and lungs of youth is unconvinci­ng. Government regulation may curb organized crime’s influence in the production and sale of pot, but it cannot eliminate the influence of another pesky criminal entity: the cool older sibling who — be it out of the kindness of his heart or for the right price — is always willing to assist a sober younger sibling in a bind. Which is to say, alcohol is legal and government-regulated, but strict guidelines and fines do not prevent irresponsi­ble brothers and sisters of legal drinking age (God bless them) from stocking the fridge with beer for their siblings’ underage house parties.

A Canada in which weed is legal will likely be a Canada in which more people are stoned. That some of those people may be teens is disturbing to many adults. But parents wary of Trudeau’s campaign promise might take comfort in the possibilit­y that legalizati­on will eliminate the criminal stigma around pot, making it easier for kids to ask questions about the drug.

Consider the way Ontario’s new comprehens­ive sex-education curriculum deals openly with topics like sexting and nude photo sharing, practices we know youth engage in relentless­ly but until recently (in Ontario schools at least) we ignored. If the Liberals make good on their promise to legalize weed, let’s hope they advocate for an educationa­l “appropriat­e use” component in schools similar to anti-drunk driving and binge-drinking campaigns. Knowledge is not only power; where drugs are concerned, knowledge is restraint.

In a world where pot is illegal, the prevailing message to youth is a) it should be avoided at all costs and b) it’s totally cool to overindulg­e and anyone who suggests otherwise is a conservati­ve blowhard. Legalizati­on of marijuana will not solve all of our problems, but in the very least it will make clear that the truth lies somewhere in the middle.

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